The building is a hybrid cultural institution, featuring museum galleries, conservation facilities, restaurants, a hotel and an auction house
Credit: Iwan Baan

Our architecture has reconciled the city’s complex narratives and offers a new perspective on the relationship between the historic and modern city with a building that reflects Chinese identity in a contemporary way – Ole Scheeren

German architect Ole Scheeren has completed the much-anticipated Guardian Art Center on the doorstep of Beijing’s historic Forbidden City.

The building is a hybrid cultural institution, featuring museum galleries, conservation facilities, restaurants and a hotel. It also claims to have the world’s first custom-built auction house.

The centre’s lower portion is a series of nested stone volumes that echo the scale and materiality of the adjacent traditional hutong courtyard houses, while a floating glass ring above “exemplifies Beijing’s status as a global metropolis”.

In a design statement, Büro Ole Scheeren said: “The ring’s placement atop the lower stone pixels lends the building a sense of weight and gravitas that ties it to Beijing’s architectural character.

“The contrast between the structure’s complimentary elements creates a vibrant aesthetic that acknowledges the complexity and multivalence of a contemporary city.”

According to Scheeren himself, the result “embeds multiple layers of abstracted cultural and historic notions” and is “a statement of humbleness in proximity to the Imperial Palace and the Forbidden City”.

Light enters the building through several thousand circular perforations in the stone volumes, creating an abstracted landscape based on the famous 14th-century Chinese painting ‘Dwelling in the Fuchun Mountains’.

Inside, a 1,700sq m (18,300sq ft) column-free exhibition space dominates the heart of the structure. It has been designed for maximum flexibility, with movable partitions and ceiling systems allowing for different configurations for exhibitions, events and auctions.

A series of smaller, more intimate rooms surround this space to accommodate other aspects of the auction house, with the conservation and restoration facilities situated in the basement.

Moving up through the building, the stone pixels provide discrete spaces to accommodate the centre’s restaurants, administrative offices and a bookshop, while the glass ring at the top houses a hotel.

The result, according to Scheeren, is “a Chinese puzzle of interlocking cultural spaces and public functions that fuse art and culture with events and lifestyle”.

“The emphasis on versatility and variety reflects the Guardian Art Center’s remit as a diverse and inclusive public space,” he said.

“The building’s configuration is intended to interconnect all of its functions.

“It’s museum as well as a cultural event machine. And it is also a space that incorporates lifestyle elements and educational facilities."

The significance of the site’s history – which stands at the intersection of Wangfujing, Beijing’s most famous shopping street, and Wusi Dajie, the site where China’s New Cultural Movement originated – led to dozens of proposed architectural designs over the past two decades.

Explaining why his proposals succeeded where others failed, Scheeren said: “Our architecture has reconciled the city’s complex narratives and offers a new perspective on the relationship between the historic and modern city with a building that reflects Chinese identity in a contemporary way.

“The completion of the Guardian Art Center positions architecture together with arts and culture as essential to the city’s future.”

Light enters the building through several thousand circular perforations in the stone volumes Credit: Shuhe

A 1,700sq m column-free exhibition space dominates the heart of the structure, with movable partitions and ceiling system allowing for different configurations to be set up Credit: Alex Fradkin

The lower portion is a series of nested stone volumes that echo the scale and materiality of the adjacent hutong courtyard houses, while a floating glass ring above acknowledges modernity
Credit: Iwan Baan

The building is a hybrid cultural institution, featuring museum galleries, conservation facilities, restaurants, a hotel and an auction house
photo: Iwan Baan

German architect Ole Scheeren has completed the much-anticipated Guardian Art Center on the doorstep of Beijing’s historic Forbidden City.

The building is a hybrid cultural institution, featuring museum galleries, conservation facilities, restaurants and a hotel. It also claims to have the world’s first custom-built auction house.

The centre’s lower portion is a series of nested stone volumes that echo the scale and materiality of the adjacent traditional hutong courtyard houses, while a floating glass ring above “exemplifies Beijing’s status as a global metropolis”.

In a design statement, Büro Ole Scheeren said: “The ring’s placement atop the lower stone pixels lends the building a sense of weight and gravitas that ties it to Beijing’s architectural character.

“The contrast between the structure’s complimentary elements creates a vibrant aesthetic that acknowledges the complexity and multivalence of a contemporary city.”

According to Scheeren himself, the result “embeds multiple layers of abstracted cultural and historic notions” and is “a statement of humbleness in proximity to the Imperial Palace and the Forbidden City”.

Light enters the building through several thousand circular perforations in the stone volumes, creating an abstracted landscape based on the famous 14th-century Chinese painting ‘Dwelling in the Fuchun Mountains’.

Inside, a 1,700sq m (18,300sq ft) column-free exhibition space dominates the heart of the structure. It has been designed for maximum flexibility, with movable partitions and ceiling systems allowing for different configurations for exhibitions, events and auctions.

A series of smaller, more intimate rooms surround this space to accommodate other aspects of the auction house, with the conservation and restoration facilities situated in the basement.

Moving up through the building, the stone pixels provide discrete spaces to accommodate the centre’s restaurants, administrative offices and a bookshop, while the glass ring at the top houses a hotel.

The result, according to Scheeren, is “a Chinese puzzle of interlocking cultural spaces and public functions that fuse art and culture with events and lifestyle”.

“The emphasis on versatility and variety reflects the Guardian Art Center’s remit as a diverse and inclusive public space,” he said.

“The building’s configuration is intended to interconnect all of its functions.

“It’s museum as well as a cultural event machine. And it is also a space that incorporates lifestyle elements and educational facilities."

The significance of the site’s history – which stands at the intersection of Wangfujing, Beijing’s most famous shopping street, and Wusi Dajie, the site where China’s New Cultural Movement originated – led to dozens of proposed architectural designs over the past two decades.

Explaining why his proposals succeeded where others failed, Scheeren said: “Our architecture has reconciled the city’s complex narratives and offers a new perspective on the relationship between the historic and modern city with a building that reflects Chinese identity in a contemporary way.

“The completion of the Guardian Art Center positions architecture together with arts and culture as essential to the city’s future.”